U E ic tgttn tt I One-hundred-sixteen years ofeditorialfreedom www.michigandaily. com Ann Arbor, Michigan m Vol. CXVI, No. 114 o2006 The Michigan Daily 'U' takes in students displaced by Katrina Administration has yet to locate dozens of students from storm- stricken areas of coast September 6, 2005 By Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporter In response to the devastation left by Hurri- cane Katrina, the University has begun admitting displaced college students from disaster-stricken universities while continuing to locate missing Uni- versity students from areas hit by the hurricane. Sue Eklund, the University dean of students, said yesterday that of the 86 current University students who are from the disaster-affected areas - Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana - her office has yet to hear back from 32 students. "We have not heard of our students being seri- ously injured or worse, though it's important to note that some do have missing relatives, more have missing friends," she said. Eklund added that her office is using e-mail to contact the missing students and offering to pay for plane tickets for students unable to access their bank accounts. She said the Office of Financial Aid has also been assisting students financially affected by the disaster on an individual basis. While the University does not know the where- abouts of 32 students, Eklund said many of those students may have ignored her office's e-mails or will only begin checking their University e-mail accounts once school has started. With some colleges effectively shut down from the flooding, University officials said their offices have been inundated with inquires from displaced students hoping to attend the University. Ted Spencer, director of undergraduate admis- sions, said on Friday that his office has received about 50 inquiries, 31 of which were from Tulane University students. Tulane, a college of about 8,000 undergraduate students located in New Orleans, canceled its fall semester on Friday. The Office of Undergraduate Admissions has so far admitted 12 as nondegree students, Spencer said, add- ing that the office does not plan to limit the number of displaced students who wish to attend the University. "We are taking this one on a case-by-case basis," Spencer said. "There is no number associated with this. Our primary concern is to help the students in the area attending a university by helping them con- tinue their education." He also noted that the admissions office has in some cases abided by an "honor system" for dis- placed students that have never applied to the Uni- versity and as a result undergraduate admissions does not have their transcript information on hand. But Spencer said his office does not anticipate any future problems because the students who have been admitted either applied to or were accepted by the University but chose to attend a different college. Spencer said he expects the inquiries to cease by Sept. 9, when fall semester is underway. The University's law school also announced on Friday it would begin accepting displaced students, with priority given to third-year law students and to students with connections to the state or the University. Sarah Zearfoss, director of admissions at the Law School, said on Friday there would be 10 openings. The Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning also announced it would admit 15 dis- placed architecture students. The Rackham Grad- uate school has also begun accepting displaced graduate students. The Michigan Daily could not reach the other schools to obtain their admissions policies regarding displaced students. The University has yet to develop a tuition poli- cy for the displaced students, said Kelly Cunning- ham, a University spokeswoman. "The University is working with others in the higher education community to best figure that out," she said. Spencer, the director of undergraduate admis- sions, said he has found that many of the displaced students have already paid tuition for their origi- nal schools or that their parents currently have no access to their bank accounts. Despite its residence halls being over peak capac- ity, the University is trying to secure on-campus housing for the displaced students. Alan Levy, spokesman for University Housing, said the office has offered on-campus housing to at least two stu- dents. Housing hopes to secure lodging for other dis- placed students through off-campus housing groups that have offered discounted rates, Levy said. Carole Henry, assistant vice president of Univer- sity affairs, said University staff members have also aided incoming displaced students by providing them with emergency funds to buy school supplies. "There were staffers who literally went shopping with (a) student and bought her the items she needed. We are just doing whatever we can," Henry said. Along with incoming students affected by the hurricane, the University has also accepted one faculty member, Prof. Steven Pierce, from Tulane University's history department. Pierce will teach history at the University beginning Sept. 21. Cun- ningham said the University so far has no plans to receive any more faculty members from other universities affected by the hurricane. ALE DZIADoSZ/Daily Evacuee Novelo Elnelviro sits outside the Astrodome in Houston. This year's graduates prepare for commencement Christiane Amanpour, CNN's chief international correspondent, to speak at the ceremony By Leah Graboski Daily Staff Reporter On Saturday, April 29 at 9:15 a.m., thousands of seniors will make their final trip to Michigan Stadium as undergraduates of the University. Christiane Aman- pour, CNN's chief international correspondent, will be speaking at the commencement. Amanpour is affiliated with the University through the Knight-Wallace Journalism Fellows program. This program permits mid-career journalists to pursue media studies at the University for a year. Amanpour will not be the only one recognized for attending the University mid-career. Among those awarded a teaching certificate will be Mark Pontoni, who never expected to be a member of the Class of 2006. When he first came to the University in 1973 after graduating from Walled Lake Central High School, Pontoni thought he'd earn his undergraduate degree four years later. Pontoni has had three stints at the University. "(The University) has been a huge part of my life for a long time," Pontoni said. Pontoni's first shot at the University didn't go as orig- inally planned. One of his major obstacles was a lack of financial support from his family. On top of that, he found him- self married and raising three children. After only two years, Pontoni left the University - for the first time. More than five years later, Pontoni and his wife decided to make the financial sacrifice, allowing him to return to the University to "make it happen." In 1984, he graduated with a bachelor's in political science. In 1988, he earned a master's degree in the same subject. With two degrees under his belt, Pontoni decided to give the business world a try, opening a marketing com- pany, Merit Marketing Group. After facing economic difficulties a few years ago, he did what he'd always wanted to do - come back to the University to earn a teaching certificate. "It's not easy to do when you are 50," Pontoni said. "To all the people out there that are trying to go back and finish, it is possible." The campus has changed a great deal since the '70s, Pontoni said. One of the most obvious changes, he said, is the pres- ence of deputized police on campus. "It's not positive or negative, it's just really different," he said. For Pontoni, students today are more career-oriented. During his time, Pontoni said, the students he knew focused first on being good people, and second on their career aspirations. Students used to focus more on activities and less on propelling themselves into jobs, he said. Pontoni was very involved with Model United Nations as well as intramural sports. As a volunteer organizer for an independent club that brings Model UN to high schools around Michigan, he has remained involved to this day. Pontoni is looking to find a teaching job in Michigan, but recognizes the poor condition of the job market. "It's a matter of paying student loans back," he said. Pontoni said he is better able to balance being a stu- dent and raising a family today because his children are grown and not as dependent on him as in the past. One son attends the University of Chicago and another son, following in his father's footsteps, is fin- ishing his fourth year at the University's Dearborn campus. His daughter is taking classes at Washtenaw Community College, but is considering transferring to the University. North Quad back to drawing board Coleman named first female president of'U' Dissatisfaction with exterior design delays project by at least a year April 10, 2006 By Farayha Arrine Daily Staff Reporter Students will have to wait at least another year for the opening of North Quad Residence Hall and Academic Complex, a state-of-the- art residence hall slated to replace the Frieze Building. The construc- tion has been delayed because University administrators were dis- satisfied with plans for the build- ing's exterior. According to University administra- tors, the opening of the residence hall will be pushed back to the fall of 2010. The setback will not affect the demo- lition of the Frieze Building, which will begin this summer as scheduled. Originally, the University hoped to start housing students in North Quad in the fall of 2009, but problems with the exterior forced administrators to pull schematic designs from the agenda of the University Board of Regents meet- ing last month, when the regents were slated to approve them. University President Mary Sue Cole- the gateway from the north to the Uni- versity's central campus. Diane Brown, associate vice presi- dent for facilities and operations, said there is a possibility that the architec- tural firm - Einhorn, Yaffee, Prescott - that created the design will subcon- tract another architect to bring a new perspective to the project. North Quad is the first new residence hall the University has built in 35 years. Both dorm rooms for students and offices for various departments will be housed in the new quad in an attempt to merge academic and residential life. Other features of the complex include high-tech video walls, a modern dining center and study lounges. But administrators said focusing on the interior of the building caused the exterior to be somewhat neglected. "We were so consumed with the inside, so excited, that we didn't have enough time to reflect on the outside," Coleman said. When schematic designs of the new building were released last month, Timothy Slottow, the Univer- sity's chief financial officer, began receiving complaints that the look was not distinctive enough, Associ- ate Provost Phil Hanlon said. Plans for North Quad were first announced in the fall of 2004. Since Regents unanimously elect former president of University of Iowa to be 13th University president September 3, 2002 By Karen Schwartz and Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporters Mary Sue Coleman, former president of the University of Iowa, was welcomed to the University by the University Board of Regents and community mem- bers May 29 as she was elected to be the University's 13th president in a motion carried unanimously by the regents. Coleman, who had been president of Iowa since 1995, began her term at the University of Michigan Aug. 1 under a five-year contract that was finalized at the June regents meeting. "She will be a strong, creative, expe- rienced, thoughtful and successful pres- ident of the University of Michigan," Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) said. "And let it be said again and again, girls can do math and science." Regents also praised interim Univer- sity President B. Joseph White, express- ing gratitude and appreciation for his dedication and involvement in keeping in May, Coleman remained at Iowa for the following two months "I have two responsibilities that I have to do going forward," she said, referring to both her position at Iowa and her need to prepare for her new role in Ann Arbor. White remained in charge of the University until the beginning of August but said he would confer with Coleman on any major decisions made between May and then. Regent Laurence Deitch (D-Bing- ham Farms), chair of the Board of Regents and the Presidential Search Committee, said he is confident Cole- man is ready for the job. "She was quite simply the best of the best. We think the University and the community will benefit from her lead- ership," he said. "As an administrator, she's smart and she's tough and she knows how big places like this run." He added that Coleman is well- known in higher education circles and that her name is on "everybody's short list of leaders of higher education." Deitch cited Coleman's achieve- ments and credentials as part of what made her an appealing candi- date, commenting on the breadth of her experiences and involvement in research and a variety of other areas. "We believe she will prove to be o~ne o~fthe cgrea~t leadersof the Un i- FILE PHOTO Incoming University President Mary Sue Coleman speaks after being welcomed by the University's regents. It was "a truly extraordinary com- mitment by 16 people with very busy lives," Deitch said. The University community at large had a chance to be part of the process as well, as 25 meetings were held to give the community a chance to voice opinions and hopes for the next Uni- versity leader. "The election of the next presi- dent mattered to everyone - everyone cared. It reaffirmed our commit- ment," said Rackham Dean Earl Lewis, chair of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee. L ewis said over 200 neonle were who were qualified to lead the Univer- sity in many different ways. Coleman said that if it had been an open search she would not have con- sidered candidacy. She is not the only one who would have refused candi- dacy, Lewis said. Lewis said the openness in Har- vard's recent presidential search did not seem to harm former University Presi- dent Lee Bollinger, whom Coleman is replacing. Bollinger was announced last year to be a finalist and then lost to former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Lawrence Summers, he believes Bol- linL~er is the exception to tihe ruile. II